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NAASR Lecture Oct. 26 on Armenian Diasporan Cultural Identity

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  • NAASR Lecture Oct. 26 on Armenian Diasporan Cultural Identity

    PRESS RELEASE
    National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    395 Concord Avenue
    Belmont, MA 02478
    Phone: 617-489-1610
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Contact: Marc A. Mamigonian


    LECTURE AT NAASR ON POST-1915 ARMENIAN DIASPORAN CULTURAL IDENTITY


    Zeynep Turan, a Ph.D. candidate in Environmental Psychology at the City
    University of New York, will give a lecture entitled "Objects of Legacy:
    Material Culture and Post-1915 Armenian Cultural Identity in Diaspora"
    on Thursday, October 26, at 8:00 p.m., at the National Association for
    Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) Center , 395 Concord Ave.,
    Belmont, MA.

    The displacement and involuntary resettlement of the Armenians of the
    Ottoman Empire from their ancestral lands created the need to rebuild
    identities based on lost landscapes, nostalgia, and collective symbols.
    Having been displaced from one's homeland, one might make one's new
    dwelling in language, in stories, or in personal objects. An identity
    based on being from "there" but living "here" encourages a sense of
    place maintained as much by stories and memories as by the topography of
    one's homeland.

    Material Objects Provide a Link To Lost Homeland

    Since the experience of forced migration destabilizes a person's
    relationship to the environment, a collection of personal objects may
    allow one to form a safe area from which one can reclaim (or disclaim)
    personal and cultural identity. For Armenians originally from Asia
    Minor, as well as Greeks and displaced Palestinians, the personal
    objects brought from their homelands provided a sense of cultural
    identity and security that has been taken for granted. These objects
    took on the roles that family, friends, and a familiar ancestral
    environment would have played had the 1915 genocide, the population
    exchange, and the displacements never happened. These material objects
    enable their owners - the displaced persons and their descendants - at
    least to imagine a security that has been lost.

    Turan is in the final year of a doctoral program in Environmental
    Psychology at the City University of New York (CUNY). A native of
    Izmir, Turkey, she is focusing her research on the effects of
    displacement on Armenians, Greeks, and Palestinians, as well as others
    forced to flee their homelands, and their descendants. She holds
    Masters degrees in Psychology and Architectural History and Theory.

    The NAASR Center and Headquarters is located opposite the First Armenian
    Church and next to the U.S. Post Office. Ample parking is available
    around the building and in adjacent areas. The lecture will begin
    promptly at 8:00 p.m. More information about the lecture is available
    by calling 617-489-1610, faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or
    writing to NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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